Mexico City studio Comunal Taller de Arquitectura produced a prefabricated bamboo frame for this self-build social housing prototype, which was designed to be recreated by residents in just seven days.

Indonesian architect Budi Pradono opted for bamboo when designing the complex roof of this sloping house in the Balinese village of Kelating. It was inspired by traditional temporary structures known as Taring.

Part of Vo Trong Nghia Architects’ House for Trees series, which aims to re-establish tropical green space in Vietnam’s cities, Bamboo House’s exterior is covered with huge concrete planters that have vertical grooves formed from the bamboo poles that were used for their formwork.

To reduce cost, and eliminate the need to transport materials to the site during the difficult wet season, Enrique Mova Alvarado used 900 bamboo poles harvested from the site to create this house in an Ecuadorian rainforest.

Italian non-profit architecture studio Made in Earth designed this vibrant foster home, which is surrounded by a bamboo screen, to house 15 HIV-positive children in an Indian village for charity Terre des Hommes Core Trust.

Bamboo was used to cover the windows of this wooden treetop holiday home in Sri Lanka. The house takes cues from local watch huts and is raised up on steel supports to offer a breathtaking view over a nearby rubber plantation and lush surrounding jungle.

In a nod to the country’s Spanish colonial era architecture, Atelier Sacha Cotture clad the facade of this family home in the Philippines with vertical bamboo poles, which also wrap around a central courtyard, to provide the residents’ privacy